Regulatory Update · June 2026 Medically reviewed by Precision Telemed Clinical Team

Is Compounded Tirzepatide Still Legal to Get Online in 2026?

Large-scale compounded tirzepatide is now restricted after the FDA resolved the shortage and moved to close the 503B pathway. Here's exactly what changed — and what your options are today.

The direct answer

As of 2026, routine large-scale compounded tirzepatide is no longer legally available the way it was during the 2022–2024 shortage. The FDA declared the tirzepatide shortage resolved in October 2024 and ended compounding enforcement discretion for outsourcing (503B) facilities on March 19, 2025. On May 1, 2026, the FDA proposed removing tirzepatide from the 503B bulks list entirely, citing no clinical need (91 FR 23431). One narrow exception remains: a state-licensed (503A) pharmacy can still compound tirzepatide for an individual patient when a prescriber documents a specific clinical need an FDA-approved product can't meet — but mass-produced copies are no longer permitted. For most patients in 2026, the legitimate paths are FDA-approved brand-name tirzepatide (Zepbound or Mounjaro) or a clinically appropriate alternative prescribed through a licensed provider.

Regulatory history

What Changed, and When

The window for large-scale compounded tirzepatide closed gradually over 18 months. Here is the exact sequence.

DateWhat happened
Oct 2024FDA declared the tirzepatide shortage resolved
Feb 18, 2025Enforcement discretion ended for 503A state-licensed pharmacies
Mar 19, 2025Enforcement discretion ended for 503B outsourcing facilities — mass compounding effectively ends
May 1, 2026FDA proposed excluding tirzepatide from the 503B bulks list ("no clinical need" finding) — Federal Register docket 2026-08552, 91 FR 23431
Jun 30, 2026Public comment period closes at 11:59 p.m. ET — confirmed per 91 FR 23431
TBDFDA final determination — no timeline announced; FDA stated only that it "intends to publish" a final determination in the Federal Register after reviewing comments. We will update this page when it publishes.

Important context: Related litigation challenging the FDA's shortage authority is still working through the 5th Circuit and remains unresolved. This timeline reflects the current regulatory state — not necessarily the final word. Precision Telemed tracks this closely and updates guidance as the situation evolves.

Patient safety

Why the FDA Acted

The FDA's decision rests on patient-safety findings, not just paperwork.

320+ Adverse Event Reports

The FDA logged more than 320 adverse-event reports tied to compounded tirzepatide — including dosing errors from multidose vials, some requiring hospitalization. These reports were a central factor in the agency's decision.

Counterfeit Products Online

Counterfeit and substandard tirzepatide products entered the market through online channels. The FDA issued more than 50 warning letters to compounders and telehealth distributors operating outside legal boundaries.

Affordability Is Not a Clinical Need

The FDA explicitly rejected affordability and access as constituting "clinical need" under compounding law. The legal threshold requires a documented medical reason an approved product cannot meet — not a price difference.

What's still permitted

503A patient-specific compounding still exists — but its scope is precisely defined by law. Most competitor pages get this wrong. Here is exactly what is and isn't permitted.

✓ Still permitted

503A Patient-Specific Compounding

  • A state-licensed 503A pharmacy receives a prescription for a specific, named patient
  • The prescriber has documented a clinical need that an FDA-approved product cannot meet — for example, a verified allergy to an inactive ingredient in Zepbound or Mounjaro
  • The prescription is filled for that patient only — not pre-made in bulk
  • The pharmacy operates under its state board of pharmacy license and applicable USP standards
✗ No longer permitted

What Is Now Prohibited

  • 503B outsourcing facilities mass-compounding tirzepatide for distribution
  • Compounding based on price or convenience alone — affordability is explicitly not a qualifying need
  • Pre-made "copies" of Zepbound or Mounjaro sold online without a verified individual clinical need
  • Any provider claiming to sell "legal" compounded tirzepatide without a documented patient-specific need

This distinction — patient-specific vs. industrial scale — is where most telehealth providers mislead patients. If you are offered compounded tirzepatide with no discussion of a specific clinical need, ask questions.

Clarifying the difference

Is Compounded Tirzepatide the Same as Mounjaro or Zepbound?

No. Compounded tirzepatide is not an FDA-approved product; Mounjaro and Zepbound are.

Compounded tirzepatide
(503A patient-specific)
Brand-name tirzepatide
(Zepbound / Mounjaro)
FDA approvalNot pre-market approved — compounded under state pharmacy lawFDA-approved
Safety reviewCompounded by a licensed pharmacist to individual prescription standardsReviewed by FDA pre-market
Manufacturing oversightState board of pharmacy oversight; USP standards applyFDA cGMP-inspected facility
Currently availableYes — via narrow 503A patient-specific exception with documented clinical needYes — via licensed prescriber
ManufacturerState-licensed compounding pharmacyEli Lilly

Both products use the same active molecule — tirzepatide. The key difference is the regulatory pathway: brand-name products go through FDA pre-market review; compounded products are prepared by a licensed pharmacist under state pharmacy law for a specific patient's documented need. Both can be prescribed by a licensed clinician.

Legitimate routes in 2026

Your Options If You're Exploring Tirzepatide

Precision Telemed only offers pathways that are fully compliant with current FDA guidance. Here is what that means in practice.

FDA-Approved Tirzepatide via a Licensed Prescriber

Zepbound (for weight management) and Mounjaro (for type 2 diabetes) are available through a licensed telehealth provider after a clinical consultation. This is the primary compliant route for most patients in 2026.

Clinically Appropriate GLP-1 Alternatives

Semaglutide-based therapies (Wegovy, Ozempic) may be appropriate depending on your clinical profile and goals. A licensed provider can evaluate which molecule and dosing pathway makes the most sense for you.

503A Patient-Specific Compounding (Where Eligible)

If a licensed clinician evaluates your case and documents a clinical need that an FDA-approved product cannot meet — such as a verified inactive ingredient allergy — a 503A compounding pathway may remain open. This is patient-by-patient, not a general offering.

About Precision Telemed

How We Approach This

Precision Telemed is a family-owned, technology-driven telehealth platform connecting patients with licensed clinicians across weight management, hormone optimization, and longevity. We track regulatory developments closely — not as a compliance exercise, but because our patients deserve accurate information about what is and isn't legally available.

When the FDA's enforcement posture on tirzepatide compounding changed, we updated our programs to reflect it. We only operate within current FDA guidance — and we believe that transparency and compliance are the foundation of good care, not obstacles to it.

J.P. Rius, Founder · Precision Telemed
Clinical assertions on this page are reviewed by Precision Telemed's licensed medical team.

Common questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Exact questions patients and AI engines are asking. Plain answers.

Sources

References & Further Reading

All regulatory claims on this page are sourced from FDA.gov and the Federal Register. We link to primary sources so you can verify.

Regulatory facts on this page were verified against FDA.gov and the Federal Register as of June 2026. The rulemaking process is ongoing — verify all dated claims at publish time, especially anything tied to the comment period and expected final rule.

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